http://www.nndb.com/people/735/000022669/Born: 7-Dec-1915
Birthplace: Brooklyn, NY
Gender: Male
Religion: Jewish
Race or Ethnicity: White
Sexual orientation: Straight
Occupation: Actor
Nationality: United States
Military service: US Army (1940-45, Captain)
Eli Wallach is the oldest old-time Hollywood actor who is still working as an actor. He played Tuco ("the ugly") in The Good, the Bad and the Ugly with Clint Eastwood, the train robber in the all-star How the West was Won, the leader of the bandits in The Magnificent Seven with Yul Brynner and Steve McQueen, and a heartbroken mechanic in The Misfits with Clark Gable and Marilyn Monroe. He played Don Altobello, the cunning competitor to the Corleone family in The Godfather: Part III, and he was the blind hitman in Tough Guys with Kirk Douglas and Burt Lancaster. His first film, which Wallach considers his best, was Elia Kazan's Baby Doll with Karl Malden and Carroll Baker.
Wallach grew up poor and Jewish in an Italian neighborhood of Brooklyn. Appearing in a school play at 15, he knew he would be an actor. After college and Army duty, he was one of the early practitioners of method acting, studying at the Actors Studio with Marlon Brando, Patricia Neal, Montgomery Clift, and Kevin McCarthy. As a young, struggling actor, when he got a role in a road show, he sublet his apartment to Brando, who, Wallach complained years later, was often late with the rent.
Wallach made his Broadway debut in Skydrift in 1945, opposite Rita Moreno, also making her first New York appearance. The play bombed and closed within a week. He won a Tony for The Rose Tattoo in 1951 with Maureen Stapleton, and an Obie Award in 1963 for The Typists and the The Tiger, costarring his wife. He won an Emmy for the UN-funded anti-drug film The Poppy Is Also A Flower in 1967.
Wallach is known as a Hollywood actor, but he has always lived in New York. He married Anne Jackson, an actress from those drama workshops, and they worked together in numerous plays and films. Wallach has said that he and his wife were lucky to find scripts where their characters argued, as it kept their marriage healthy. They remained married for life, and Wallach was never arrested, never scandalized.
He was paid $350 to play Mr Freeze on TV's Batman, and was astounded when he read that Arnold Schwarzenegger was paid $20 million to play the same character in the disastrous Batman & Robin. After Wallach grumbled about the injustice of it all, his wife offered sound advice: "Lift weights". After Wallach told that story on a few talk shows in 2005, promoting his autobiography, The Good, the Bad, and Me, he received an unexpected package from Gov. Schwarzenegger -- a small set of ten-pound barbells.
Father: Abraham Wallach
Mother: Bertha Schorr
Wife: Anne Jackson (actress, m. 5-Mar-1948, one son, two daughters)
Son: Peter D. Wallach (movie industry, b. 20-Feb-1951)
Daughter: Roberta L. Wallach (actress, b. 2-Aug-1955)
Daughter: Katherine B. Wallach (actress, b. 13-Jul-1958)
High School: Erasmus Hall High School, Brooklyn, NY (1932)
University: BA, University of Texas at Austin (1936)
University: MS Education, City College of New York (1938)
Tony 1951
Emmy 1966
Oscar (honorary) 2010, for lifetime achievement
Al Franken for Senate
Polish Ancestry
Jewish Ancestry
Author of books:
The Good, The Bad, And Me: In My Anecdotage (2005, memoir)
FILMOGRAPHY AS ACTOR
Wall Street: Money Never Sleeps (14-May-2010) · Julie Steinhardt
The Ghost Writer (12-Feb-2010) · Old Man
Tickling Leo (25-Jul-2009)
New York, I Love You (5-Feb-2009) · Abe
Mama's Boy (30-Nov-2007)
The Holiday (5-Dec-2006)
The Hoax (15-Oct-2006)
Unforgivable Blackness: The Rise and Fall of Jack Johnson (4-Sep-2004) [VOICE]
King of the Corner (2004) · Sol Spivak
Broadway: The Golden Age (Apr-2003) · Himself
Monday Night Mayhem (14-Jan-2002)
The Bookfair Murders (9-Apr-2000)
Keeping the Faith (5-Apr-2000)
Uninvited (26-Nov-1999)
The Associate (25-Oct-1996) · Fallon
Two Much (15-Mar-1996)
Baseball (18-Sep-1994) · Himself
Night and the City (16-Oct-1992)
Mistress (29-Apr-1992)
Article 99 (13-Mar-1992) · Sam Abrams
The Godfather: Part III (25-Dec-1990)
The Two Jakes (10-Aug-1990) · Cotton Weinberger
Nuts (20-Nov-1987)
Tough Guys (3-Oct-1986)
Christopher Columbus (7-Mar-1985)
Sam's Son (17-Aug-1984)
The Executioner's Song (10-Sep-1982)
Skokie (17-Nov-1981)
The Pride of Jesse Hallam (3-Mar-1981)
The Salamander (1981)
The Hunter (1-Aug-1980)
Winter Kills (11-May-1979)
Firepower (27-Apr-1979)
Circle of Iron (14-Dec-1978)
Movie Movie (Nov-1978)
Girlfriends (Aug-1978)
Nasty Habits (10-Oct-1977)
The Domino Principle (25-Jul-1977)
The Deep (17-Jun-1977) · Adam Coffin
The Sentinel (7-Jan-1977) · Det. Gatz
Cinderella Liberty (7-Apr-1974)
Crazy Joe (15-Feb-1974)
Don't Turn the Other Cheek (22-Dec-1971)
Romance of a Horsethief (1971)
The People Next Door (26-Aug-1970)
The Angel Levine (28-Jul-1970) · Delicatessen Clerk
The Adventures of Gerard (Jan-1970)
Zigzag (1970) · Mario Gambretti
Mackenna's Gold (18-Mar-1969)
The Brain (7-Mar-1969)
Ace High (31-Oct-1968)
A Lovely Way to Die (6-May-1968)
How to Save a Marriage and Ruin Your Life (17-Jan-1968)
The Tiger Makes Out (18-Aug-1967)
The Good, the Bad and the Ugly (23-Dec-1966) · Tuco -- The Ugly
How to Steal a Million (13-Jul-1966) · Davis Leland
The Poppy Is Also a Flower (22-Apr-1966)
Genghis Khan (15-Apr-1965)
Lord Jim (25-Feb-1965) · The General
Kisses for My President (21-Aug-1964) · Valdez
The Moon-Spinners (2-Jul-1964)
Act One (26-Dec-1963) · Warren Stone
The Victors (22-Nov-1963)
How the West Was Won (1-Nov-1962) · Charlie Gant
Adventures of a Young Man (18-Jul-1962)
The Misfits (1-Feb-1961) · Guido
The Magnificent Seven (23-Oct-1960) · Calvera
Seven Thieves (11-Mar-1960) · Poncho
The Lineup (11-Jun-1958)
Baby Doll (18-Dec-1956) · Silva Vacarro